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Project ExPress
Day 8
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5.
World War I
1914-1918

Causes (the powder Keg)




Imperialism
Militarism
National ism
Alliances

Archduke Franz Ferdinand is killed

One country after the other gets involved because
of alliances
2 sides

Allies





USA
G.B.
FR
______
Italy

_______ Powers


Ger
Austro-Hungary
Schlieffen Plan

Ger. knock out Fr. Then focus on ______
Characteristics of WWI
______ warfare
 No man’s land
 Begins with horses
but ends with tanks
machine guns, planes, etc

US involvement
Zimmerman Note From Germany To: Mexico
We intend to begin on the 1st of February unrestricted submarine
warfare. We shall endeavor in spite of this to keep the United
States of America neutral. In the event of this not succeeding,
we make Mexico a proposal of alliance on the following basis:
make war together, make peace together, generous financial
support and an understanding on our part that Mexico is to
reconquer the lost territory in Texas, New Mexico and Arizona.
The settlement in detail is left to you. You will inform the
President of the above most secretly as soon as the outbreak
of war with the United States of America is certain and add the
suggestion that he should, on his own initiative, invite Japan to
immediate adherence and at the same time mediate between
Japan and ourselves. Please call the President's attention to
the fact that the ruthless employment of our submarines now
offers the prospect of compelling England in a few months to
make peace. Signed, Zimmermann.

Allies Win
Treaty of Versailles
W. Wilson 14 Points
 No secret treaties
 Free trade/seas
 Colonies should
determine their destiny
 ___________ (US does
not join)
The rest of Europe
 Punish the Germans



Ger. War Guilt
Demilitarize Ger.
Take territory away from
Ger. & other Central
Powers
This treaty sets the stage for 2 major
events
World Wide ____________
 Ger is in debt/ Europe is
blown up & the USA’s
stock goes down 1929
World War II
 Ger. humiliation paves
the way for an ultra
nationalist & military
minded party to take
power. One who
promises respect for Ger.
World War II

Causes




WWI Treat of ___________
Hitler’s territorial expansion
Appeasement
Hitler
Alliances
Axis
 Ger. Hitler
 Italy ___________
 Japan Emperor Hirohito
Allies
 USA FDR Truman
 G.B. Churchill
 USSR ______
 China Chiang Kai-shek
2 fronts/areas
Europe
 Bad guy Ger. IT.
Pacific
Quick lesson in
Communism USSR
 Community rule
 Goal to abolish
government honors the
______
Fascism NAZI
 One leader all power
 Strong central leader
(godlike)
Nazi-Soviet Anti
Aggression Pact
Blitzkrieg-________ war
Nazi strategy


Poland
France
US involvement

Dec. __ 1941, Pearl Harbor attacked
Sneak attack 1,000’s dead
 Led to
Japanese _________

D-Day


Eisenhower head of Allies in Europe
Lead to ____ Day
Island Hopping


Philippines Bataan Death March
General Mac Arthur
A-bomb






Truman
Manhattan Project
Hiroshima/Nagasaki
V-J day 1945
Why? Read articles
kamikazes
War on the home front





Rationing
Propaganda
Japanese internment
Women’s roles
Racism
Hitler’s Germany

Mein Kamph



Jews are the scapegoat/problem
Aryan’s are the super race
The Final Solution-holocaust (6,000,000 killed)
Results of WWII





UN-United Nations is formed
McArthur-_________Japan
______War- begins
Holocaust- is over but this leads to Middle
East tension
Nuremberg trials
Israel



Jews 1st
Arabs
Post WWII

Brits say Jews




Zionism
Violence
USA gets
involved
Violence
continues
Gandhi & Indian Independence

Civil Disobedience
Mao Zedong and Chinese
Revolution:




In the period following WWII, this leader of the
Communist Party in China began a war against
the Nationalists led by Chiang Kai-shek.
In 1949, the Nationalists fled mainland China
and established their government on the island
of Taiwan.
This island is still viewed as part of China by
the mainland government and the U.S. openly
supports Taiwanese independence.
Although many aspects of the economy have
become market-based, the Chinese Communist
Party still maintains power in China.
COLD WAR
Capitalism
 USA & West Europe





Free market
_____________
Individualism
Religious
Unlimited party gov.
Communism/socialism
 USSR/China/North
Korea/North Vietnam &
Eastern Europe





Controlled economy
Controlled speech
Group focus
______
One party gov.
Terms Who, what, when, where, why
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
Truman Doctrine
Marshal Plan
Nuclear Arms Race
NATO vs. WARSAW Pact
Space Race (sputnik)
Bay of Pigs
Cuban Missal Crisis
SALT I & SALT II
Germany divided/ Berlin Wall 1989 falls
Berlin Air Lift
Gorbachev/peristroika/ glastnost
Korean War

Domino Theory
Armistice/Tie


38th parallel
Simulation
US attack
 DMZ end of war 38th
 Communist/China
attack

Hydrogen bomb:

This bomb was NOT the same as those dropped on Japan during
WWII. This bomb was first tested by the U.S. and then later by the
Soviet Union in the early 1950s.

The development of this destructive
weapon became the basis of “mutually
assured destruction.”

This was the idea that if the Soviet Union or the United
States launched Hydrogen bombs, the other nation would
be able to launch their own arsenal before being destroyed.

This helped to maintain the balance of
power.
Attack on Pearl Harbor:
On the morning of December 7, 1941,
the navy of the Empire of Japan launched
a surprise attack on the U.S. Navy base at
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii.
 Over 2,403 Americans were killed and
1,178 more were wounded, 21 ships were
damaged, and 300 aircraft were
destroyed.
 The Japanese attack took the United
States officially into World War II.

Internment of JapaneseAmericans:



One effect of America’s entry into the war was
alarm about the loyalty of Japanese Americans:
120,000 Japanese Americans lived in the United
States, most of them on the West Coast.
Fears of spies and sabotage led to prejudice and
sometimes violence against Japanese Americans.
In the name of national security, Roosevelt
ordered all people of Japanese ancestry be
moved from California and parts of Washington,
Oregon, and Arizona to rural prison camps.
Nazi ideology:
As outlined in Adolf Hitler’s semiautobiographical work Mein Kampf (My
Struggle), the Nazi party believed in
German superiority – economically,
militarily, socially, and “racially.”
 In order to re-assert Germany’s role in the
world, Hitler and his party created a “rightwing authoritarian regime” that influenced
nearly every corner of the country.

Holocaust:
Planned internment, enslavement, and
murder of Jews and other religious and
ethnic minorities perpetrated by Hitler’s
Nazi party.
 By the end of WWII approximately 10
million people had been killed.

Lend-Lease:



March, 11, 1941, nine months before Pearl
Harbor, Congress passed the Lend-Lease Act
and amended the Neutrality Acts so the United
States could lend military equipment and
supplies to any nation the president said
was vital to the defense of the United States.
Roosevelt approved one billion dollars in LendLease aid to Great Britain in October 1941.
When the United States entered World War II,
fifty billion dollars’ worth of equipment and
supplies had already been sent to Britain,
France, the Soviet Union, and China.
 After
Pearl Harbor, five million men
volunteered for military service but more
were needed to fight a total war.
 The Selective Service System expanded
the draft, and ten million more men joined
the ranks of the American Armed Forces.
 So great was the need of the military, a
Women’s Auxiliary Army Corps was
formed to fill noncombat positions
otherwise filled by men, freeing up the men
for frontline duty.
 One
way Americans conserved on the
home front was through the mandatory
government rationing system.
 Under this system, each household
received a “c book” with coupons to be
used when buying scarce items such as
meat, sugar, and coffee.
 Gas rationing was also used to help save
gasoline for military use.
 In
order to meet the supply needs of the
US military, many factories were
converted from civilian to military
purposes.
 This conversion lasted till war’s end, and
allowed American manufacturing might
to support the war effort.
 Soldiers
needed tanks, planes, ships, guns,
bullets, and boots.
 To equip the troops, the whole of American
industry was dedicated to supplying the
military.
 More than six million workers in these
plants, factories, and shipyards were
women.
 With the men who once did these jobs now
fighting overseas, women filled the void.
 Women volunteered for this work even
though they were only paid on average 60%
as much as men doing the same jobs.
D-Day was the code name for the first day of
Operation Overlord, the Allied invasion of
Nazi-occupied France, on June 6, 1944.
 It remains the largest seaborne invasion in
history with over 156,000 men crossing the
English Channel in 6,939 vessels.
 The German troops occupying France were
caught almost completely by surprise and,
although the Allies met heavy resistance in small
areas, the invasion went almost exactly according
to plan.
 From the French beaches, American and British
forces pushed east to Germany.
 This marked the beginning of victory for the
Allies in Europe.

LOS ALAMOS:

The American government had developed two
atomic bombs in a secret laboratory in Los
Alamos, New Mexico.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE ATOMIC BOMB:





Allied leaders planning the war against Japan knew that
once they had defeated the Japanese Navy in the Pacific
Ocean they would still have to invade Japan itself to end
the war.
They knew Japan still had a huge army that would
defend every inch of the homeland, and both sides
could possibly lose millions of people in the process.
President Truman decided there was only one way to
avoid an invasion of Japan and still defeat them.
He would use a brand new weapon that no one had ever
seen before, the atomic bomb.
The bombs were dropped on Japan in early August
1945. On September 2, 1945, the Japanese
surrendered, and World War II was finally over.
TEHERAN, YALTA, POTSDAM:

Meetings of Allied leaders (Churchill, Stalin,
FDR/Truman), where discussions occurred
regarding Allied plans for post-war Europe.
IMPACT OF ALLIED NEGOTIATIONS ON EASTERN
EUROPE:

Because of the Soviet Union’s key role in
defeating Germany, the Allies were unable to
completely ignore Stalin’s demands for what
became a “sphere of influence” in many
Eastern European countries.
MARSHALL PLAN:




The European Recovery Program, better known as the
Marshall Plan for Secretary of State George Marshall,
was America’s main program for rebuilding Western
Europe and opposing communism after World War II.
The plan was put into action in July 1947 and operated
for four years.
During that time, the United States spent thirteen billion
dollars on economic and technical assistance for the
war-torn democratic European countries that had been
nearly destroyed during World War II.
The Marshall Plan offered the same aid to the Soviet
Union and its allies if they would make political reforms
and accept certain outside controls; however, the
Soviets rejected this proposal.
 General
Douglass MacArthur was
appointed as the Supreme Commander
of the Allied Powers in Japan following
WWII.
 During the four years following WWII, he
worked with the Japanese government to
draft a constitution, institute democratic
reforms, reduce the size of the Japanese
military, and privatize companies
formerly run by the government.




To halt the spread of communism to Western Europe from the
Soviet-controlled nations of Eastern Europe, the United
States formed the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
(NATO) with many of the noncommunist nations in Europe,
including former wartime allies Britain and France.
In response, the Soviet Union created the Warsaw Pact, an
alliance of the communist nations it controlled in Eastern
Europe.
Convinced the Soviets were attempting to establish a sphere
of influence throughout the world, the United States viewed
these actions as a direct threat to American security.
This determination to stop the spread of communism is
known as the policy of containment and was the basis for
many U.S. foreign policy decisions during the Cold War.
In 1947, President Harry S Truman proclaimed
the Truman Doctrine.
 It stated the United States would supply any
nation with economic and military aid to
prevent its falling under the Soviet sphere of
influence.
 Truman called upon the United States to “support
free peoples who are resisting attempted
subjugation by armed minorities or by outside
pressures.”
 Although Truman never referred directly to the
U.S.S.R., anyone who heard the declaration,
including the Soviet leaders, knew the Soviets
were the “outside pressures” Truman talked
about.

In 1950, the United States and the democratic
government of South Korea went to war against the
communist government of North Korea.
 North Korea was being aided by the new Chinese
communist government that had recently won the Chinese
Civil War.
 Combat began when communist troops invaded South
Korea.
 The United States sent its troops to force the communists
back to North Korea and drove them across the border.
 The U.S. troops then followed the enemy into North Korea in
an effort to eliminate communism from the Korean
peninsula.
 When the Americans reached the border between North
Korea and China, the Chinese attacked, forcing the
Americans back to South Korea.

Americans had an increased fear of communism
after a communist regime took control of China
in 1950 and the United States and South Korea went
to war against North Korean communists who were
being aided by China’s new communist government.
 This spread of communism in Asia encouraged a
desire among some Americans to stop communism
from spreading to the United States.
 A second series of “Red Scares,” highlighted by
Senator Joseph McCarthy’s statements about
alleged communist infiltration of the U.S.
government and U.S. Army, led to civil rights
violations of those who were communists, were
suspected of being communists, or were suspected
of knowing someone who might be a communist.

In 1957, the Soviet Union launched the first
artificial satellite – Sputnik I – a feat that
caused many Americans to believe the United
States had “fallen behind” the Soviet Union in
terms of understanding science and the uses of
technology.
 The success of the Soviet satellite launch led to
increased U.S. government spending on
education, especially in mathematics and
science, and on national military defense
programs.
 Additionally, Sputnik I increased Cold War
tensions by heightening U.S. fears that the
Soviet Union might use rockets to launch nuclear
weapons against the United States and its allied
nations.

 This
term describes the Cold War
competition between the United States and
the Soviet Union for superior military power.
 Weapons, particularly nuclear weapons,
became increasingly complex and
destructive.
 Following
WWII and the efforts of Indian
leaders, the British government agreed to
peacefully transfer power to India.
 However, conflicts between Muslims and
Hindus in India made it necessary to create
separate nations for each.
 Pakistan became a primarily Muslim state
and India became a primarily Hindu state.
 Millions of people had to leave their homes
and cross over into the state that reflected
their religious beliefs.
 During this time, both sides inflicted terrible
acts of violence upon the other.
 As
the primary leader of the Indian
Independence movement, Gandhi is known
for his belief in nonviolent change.
 He used civil disobedience and unarmed
demonstrations to shame the British rulers
into eventually granting India’s
Independence.
State of Israel:
• Israel was established in the British
mandate of Palestine by a United Nations
resolution following WWII.
• Palestine was divided into a Jewish state
and an Arab state.
• This decision was made possible because
of the west’s sympathy toward the Jewish
people after learning of the Holocaust.
• Many Palestinians had to flee from their
homes and live in refugee camps.
• Conflicts among Israel, the Palestinians,
and neighboring Arab states continue to be
a major foreign policy issue for countries
around the world.
Truman’s integration
order:
• In 1948, President Harry Truman
issued an executive order to
integrate the U.S. Armed Forces
and end discrimination in the
hiring of U.S. government
employees. In turn, this led to
the civil rights laws enacted in
the 1960s.
Brown v. Board of
Education:
• In this 1954 case, the U.S. Supreme Court declared
that state laws establishing “separate but equal”
public schools denied African American students
the equal education promised in the 14th
Amendment.
• The Court’s decision reversed prior rulings dating
back to the Plessy v. Ferguson case in 1896.
• Many people were unhappy with this decision, and
some even refused to follow it.
• The governor of Arkansas ordered the National
Guard to keep nine African American students from
attending Little Rock’s Central High School;
President Eisenhower sent federal troops to Little
Rock to force the high school to integrate.
Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr.:
• In 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr., was arrested in
Birmingham, Alabama, while demonstrating against
racial segregation.
• In jail he wrote his Letter from Birmingham Jail to
address fears white religious leaders had that he was
moving too fast toward desegregation.
• In his letter, King explained why victims of
segregation, violent attacks, and murder found it
difficult to wait for those injustices to end.
• Later the same year, King delivered his most famous
speech, I Have a Dream, to over 250,000 people at
the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.
• In this speech, King asked for peace and racial
harmony.
Civil Rights Act of 1964:





The Civil Rights Act of 1964 was signed into law by President
Lyndon Johnson.
This law prohibited discrimination based on race, religion, national
origin, and gender.
It allowed all citizens the right to enter any park, restroom, library,
theater, and public building in the United States.
One factor that prompted this law was the long struggle for civil
rights undertaken by America’s African American population.
Another factor was King’s famous I Have a Dream speech; its
moving words helped create widespread support for this law.
Other factors were news reports of presidential actions that
combated civil rights violations, such as Truman’s in 1948 and
Eisenhower’s in 1954, and Kennedy sending federal troops to
Mississippi (1962) and Alabama (1963) to force the integration of
public universities there.
Voting Rights Act of 1965:


The Voting Rights Act of 1965 outlawed the
requirement for would-be voters in the United States
to take literacy tests to register to vote because this
requirement was judged as unfair to minorities.
The act provided money to pay for programs to
register voters in areas with large numbers of
unregistered minorities, and it gave the Department
of Justice the right to oversee the voting laws in
certain districts that had used tactics such as literacy
tests or poll taxes to limit voting.
NOW: The National
Organization of Women



NOW was founded in 1966 to promote equal
rights and opportunities for America’s women.
NOW had its origins in the civil rights and
anti-war movements of the early 1960s.
In both of these, women felt sidelined by the
men who led organizations like SNCC and
anti-Vietnam War groups.
NOW’s goals included equality in
employment, political and social equality, and
the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment.
Environmental movement:



Protecting the environment became important to many
Americans. Silent Spring, a 1962 book about pesticides by
Rachel Carson, exposed dangers to the environment.
This book led to the Water Quality Act of 1965. The first
Earth Day was celebrated in 1970, when almost every
community across America and over 10,000 schools and
2,000 colleges organized events to raise awareness of
environmental issues; Earth Day is still celebrated each
year.
Also in 1970, President Nixon created the Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) to set limits on pollution,
conduct environmental research, and assist state and local
Ethnic conflicts:



In the mid to late 20th century and early 21st
century, ethnic conflicts have arisen around the
world.
Many of these are tied to the artificial
boundaries created by European imperialists in
Asia, Africa, and the Middle East and from the
end of Soviet control in Eastern Europe.
In some places, like Cambodia, Bosnia, and
Sudan, there have been ethnic conflicts
resulting in genocide.
New nationalisms:



Nationalism in places such as India, South
Africa, and Kenya helped lead to the end of
colonial or European rule.
For example, in South Africa, whites of
European descent controlled the majority black
popular through the system of Apartheid.
The nationalist African National Congress
worked against this system for years, eventually
toppling the minority government and making a
relatively peaceful transfer of power.
Impact of terrorism:



Terrorism is a hard word to define, but a good way
to look at it could be like a synthesis of war and
theater.
It is a dramatization of the most proscribed kind of
violence that which is perpetrated on innocent lives,
played before an audience in the hope of creating a
mood of fear for political purposes.
There are many terrorist groups but there have
been some big name groups come to life during the
20th century, such as Shining Path, Red Brigade,
Hamas, and Al Qaeda.
Multinational corporations:


The 20th and 21st centuries have seen the growth
of companies, often based in North America
and Europe, with worldwide influence.
For example, companies like Coca-Cola
Company and UPS have operations and sales all
over the world.
United Nations:



Following the end of WWII, many nations came
together to create the United Nations.
This organization includes almost all countries in
its membership.
Its goals are to promote peaceful settlement of
international issues/conflicts and work toward
greater dignity for all human beings regardless of
their economic or political context.
OPEC:



This is the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
Countries.
It includes in its membership many of the largest
oil producing nations around the world.
Prominent members include Saudi Arabia,
Nigeria, and Venezuela.
The United States is not a member country.
OPEC tries to control the world petroleum
market through changes in output.
WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION:
The World Trade Organization (WTO) was
established following WWII to promote free trade
between nations.
 This organization wants to reduce trade barriers
such as tariffs, quotas, and subsidies.

OBEYING THE LAW
U.S. citizens are responsible for obeying the
law, both criminal and civil codes.
 Failure to obey these laws can result in having to
pay fines, serve prison time, and/or forfeit assets.

PAYING TAXES
All U.S. citizens who earn income, own property,
and/or purchase goods are responsible for paying
taxes.
 The progressive income tax, property tax
assessments, and sales taxes on goods sold are all
sources of government revenue.

JURY DUTY

Although not all citizens will receive a summons
to jury duty, citizens are responsible for
honoring this civic responsibility or could be
found in contempt of court, which is a crime.
MILITARY DUTY
Although there is currently no draft for military
service in the U.S., all young men must register
for military duty when they turn 18 years old.
 This registration is with the selective service.

Political Parties

In the U.S., political parties nominate
candidates for public office, assist with
political campaigns and fundraising, create
awareness about issues important to the
party’s platform, and encourage people to
register to vote and vote at the polls on
election day.
Voting Rights


Several amendments to the U.S.
Constitution extended voting rights to
formerly disenfranchised groups.
These groups, in chronological order,
include: all white male citizens (even if they
did not own property); African-American men
(in theory although these rights were often
violated); all female citizens; and citizens
between the ages of 18 and 21.
Bill of Rights



The Bill of Rights was added to the U.S.
Constitution to reduce the fears antiFederalists had about strong central
governments.
It includes the first ten amendments to the
constitution.
These amendments guarantee protection of
the rights of individuals.
1st Amendment

The First Amendment grants to individuals
the rights to freedom of the press, petition,
religion, assembly, and speech.
5th Amendment


The Fifth Amendment protects individuals
from government abuse in legal proceedings.
Some of these protections include the right not
testify against oneself, the right to have a
Grand Jury review the evidence to determine if
one should be held in custody, the right not to
be tried for the same case twice (double
jeopardy), and the right to reasonable
compensation if the government seizes one’s
property under Eminent Domain laws.
14th Amendment


The fourteenth amendment was a response
to the Black Codes, passed to deny African
Americans their rights in the formerly
Confederate South.
This amendment clearly identified former
slaves as full U.S. citizens and guaranteed
equal treatment under the law for all citizens.